1, 2 and 3 Lambridge and attached walls and gatepiers is a Grade II listed building in the Bath and North East Somerset local planning authority area, England. First listed on 5 August 1975. Terrace houses. 20 related planning applications.

1, 2 and 3 Lambridge and attached walls and gatepiers

WRENN ID
sunken-dormer-claret
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Bath and North East Somerset
Country
England
Date first listed
5 August 1975
Type
Terrace houses
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Nos. 1, 2, and 3 Lambridge are a group of three irregular terrace houses dating to the early 19th century, with alterations in the late 19th and 20th centuries. They are located on the north side of Lambridge. The houses are constructed from limestone ashlar, with double-pitched slate roofs and moulded stacks to the party walls. They have double-depth plans with rear additions.

The houses are three storeys and have basements, with two and three-window fronts. No. 1 is slightly taller and steps forward. They have coped parapets and sill bands to the upper floors. The second floor windows are six-pane sashes. The first-floor windows were likely originally six-over-nine-pane sashes but are now late 19th-century plate glass sashes with cast iron balconettes. The ground-floor windows are two-over-two-pane sashes with horizontal glazing bars. No. 1 has a semicircular arch and fanlight over a panelled door to the left. The basement area is screened by horizontal railings that sweep up from the garden to the house. The left return elevation, facing Beaufort Place, has six-over-six-pane sash windows to the upper floors. No. 2 has a coved cornice and sill bands, with six-over-six-pane sash windows and balconettes to the upper floors, and a semicircular arch and fanlight over a three-panel door. No. 3 is similar to No. 2, but has balconettes to the first floor only, and horns to the sash windows. The ground floor has an eight-over-eight-pane sash window on the left and a similar door to No. 2 on the right. The interior of the houses has not been inspected.

Subsidiary features include an attached ashlar wall approximately 2 metres high and 50 metres long at the rear, which borders the back garden. The front gardens are divided by low walls and plinths to former railings. Nos. 2 and 3 have pyramidal-capped gatepiers.

Detailed Attributes

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